Saturday, January 29, 2022

Rockd by Walnut Hills

This is going to sound like an advertisement...consider it a recommendation.

Rockd by The Mactostrat lab at the Geoscience department at the University of Wisconsin - Madison is one of my main tools for geological exploration. It's an app on my smartphone. 

Where most geology apps are reference works, like geology textbooks or encyclopedias on your phone, Rockd is equipment. It includes a Brunton compass and information about localities with topographic and geological maps and geology and paleontology profiles. It's pretty impressive how much local information it packs. (The Brunton compass needs a gyroscope and magnetometer to work.)

Let's see what it says about my backyard, Walnut Hills in Centennial, Colorado.

When I open Rockd, I see this, my dash board.

It gives me an overview of my area. 

People that don't live here often mistake Denver for a mountain town. It may be a gateway to the Rockies but it's situated at the western edge of the Great Plains. It's hilly grasslands.

Specifically, Centennial, a town in the Denver metro area, is near the western edge of the Colorado Piedmont region. 

Denver makes a big deal about being the Mile High City but, actually, it's down in a hole carved by the South Platte River. Just about everyone around us is at higher elevations.

We're sometimes called the "high plains" but, technically, the high plains are to the east of us. As explained by Rockd, when I tap the Colorado Piedmont panel, the high plains were formed when the Colorado Plateau was pushed up when the Pacific plate crashed into (and is still crashing into) North America. The Rockies are still growing but erosion is happening faster and the craggy appearance of the Rocky Mountains is due to the deep cutting of millions of years by rain, frost, wind, and chemical action. All the debris that washed out of the mountains piled up to form the high plains, and then streams running from the mountains started cutting the softer sediment down to form the Colorado Piedmont.

How old is the rock around here? Rockd says 0.0117 mA (that stands for "mega annum" or million years) to present. This is fairly new stuff. The late pleistocene began 0.02 million years ago and the Quaternary is the most recent age of geologic time. You probably know that the continents have shifted around a lot in the past. Here's what Rockd says the World looked like in the Quaternary age.


Same as today. Really new stuff.

The colluvium mentioned is "generally unconsolidated material deposited on slopes by gravity and sheetwash". (The original source sited is Trimble, D.E., M.N. Machette, 2003, Geologic Map of the Greater Denver Area, Front Range Urban Corridor, Colorado: U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Investigations Series 1-856-H.

(If I poke the citation, Rockd carries me to the actual paper.)

The layer of colluvium is generally more than 1.5 meters thick. Mind you, that's our bedrock. Above that is the regolith. Regolith is the term for the bedrock after it rots. We have a lot of debris under our feet..

It's sort of hard to tell if the stuff in the Little Dry Creek stream bed is native or if it was placed there to slow erosion, or if it has been washed down from architectural fill upstream, but it could easily be part of the colluvium washed out of the mountains long ago. Some of that is pretty chunky.

So, we're at 5732 feet. Littleton is right on the river at 5351 feet. We're situated right at the top of the rim of the South Platte River valley, which makes the valley 381 feet deep here. The river comes out of the mountains due west of both us and Littleton at Waterton Canyon. Water flows downhill so Denver, through which the South Platte flows is lower in elevation at 5130 feet (Wikipedia says 5139-5690 feet but that would be the whole Denver metro area.)

Here's a geologic map of the area from Rockd.

The lighter stuff is the colluvium I've been talking about. The darker is Dawson formation which is an older Late Cretaceous to Paleocene rock...100.5-56 million years old. It might be worth visiting the next neighborhood over to see if Willow Creek digs into that sandstone.

Most of the fossils listed in this area are nearer the bottom of the river valley, so I don't expect to find any in this neighborhood (though I will look for some microfossils in the creek bank), also most of the minerals will be clays and quartz since most of the other stuff would have broken down long ago.

Rockd is a free download, so install it and see what it has to say about your area. You might be surprised.

No comments: